It's called "astroturf" - fake grassroots
Marc Ambinder, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
Many Americans have been under strict stay-at-home orders, or at least advisories, for more than a month.
People are frustrated and depressed, but have complied with what they’ve been asked to endure because they trust that state and local public health officials are telling the truth about the coronavirus pandemic.
There has been passionate – and honest – argument about how many people are likely to get sick and die under different circumstances and sets of official rules.
It’s not clear how uncertain and evolving scientific findings should affect extraordinary government measures that restrict citizens’ basic freedoms.
In recent days, there have there been public protests against continuing the lockdown. The people who are doing the demonstrating may really be frustrated and upset, but new research, and journalistic investigation, is revealing that there are powerful forces behind them, egging them on, who want their influence to remain secret.
Thursday, April 30, 2020
Movement toward gender equality has slowed in some areas, stalled in others
New
five-decade study finds progress curbed beginning in 1990s
New
York University
Women
have made progress in earning college degrees as well as in pay and in
occupations once largely dominated by men since 1970 -- but the pace of gains
in many areas linked to professional advancement has slowed in recent decades
and stalled in others, finds a new five-decade analysis.
"Substantial progress has been made toward gender equality since 1970 on employment and earnings as well as in women's access to certain fields of study and professions," explains Paula England, a professor of sociology at New York University and the study's senior author.
"However, movement toward gender equality has slowed down, and in some cases, stalled completely."
The
study, "Is the Gender Revolution Stalled? An Update," appears in the
journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences and
also found that movement toward gender equity, which accelerated in the 1970s
and 1980s, slowed or stopped beginning in the 1990s.
Please don’t hoard the Charmin
URI’s
supply chain management faculty answer questions about COVID-19 shortages
A good hurricane or snowstorm forecast will usually
cause a run on milk, eggs and bread. But toilet paper? With the COVID-19
crisis, that is the “new normal.” But what is driving the shortages in consumer
goods, medicines and medical supplies? Are things getting any better? And what,
if anything, are we learning?
Faculty
in supply chain management at the University of Rhode Island’s College of Business tackle
these questions below. Answering are: Lecturer Jack Beliveau, Assistant
Professor Gulver Karamemis, Associate Professor Koray Özpolat, Associate
Professor and Area Coordinator Dara Schniederjans, Senior Lecturer Brian Walsh,
and Assistant Professor Mehmet Yalcin.
17th Century London Plague social effects resemble today
Diary of Samuel Pepys shows how life under the bubonic plague mirrored today's pandemic
Ute Lotz-Heumann, University of Arizona
In early April, writer Jen Miller urged New York Times readers to start a coronavirus diary.
“Who knows,” she wrote, “maybe one day your diary will provide a valuable window into this period.”
During a different pandemic, one 17th-century British naval administrator named Samuel Pepys did just that.
He fastidiously kept a diary from 1660 to 1669 – a period of time that included a severe outbreak of the bubonic plague in London.
Epidemics have always haunted humans, but rarely do we get such a detailed glimpse into one person’s life during a crisis from so long ago.
There were no Zoom meetings, drive-through testing or ventilators in 17th-century London. But Pepys’ diary reveals that there were some striking resemblances in how people responded to the pandemic.
Ute Lotz-Heumann, University of Arizona
There were eerie similarities between Pepys’ time and our own. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images |
“Who knows,” she wrote, “maybe one day your diary will provide a valuable window into this period.”
During a different pandemic, one 17th-century British naval administrator named Samuel Pepys did just that.
He fastidiously kept a diary from 1660 to 1669 – a period of time that included a severe outbreak of the bubonic plague in London.
Epidemics have always haunted humans, but rarely do we get such a detailed glimpse into one person’s life during a crisis from so long ago.
There were no Zoom meetings, drive-through testing or ventilators in 17th-century London. But Pepys’ diary reveals that there were some striking resemblances in how people responded to the pandemic.
Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Trump's 180 spins are making us all dizzy
Toxic leadership is dangerous
By Terry H. Schwadron, DCReport Opinion
Editor
One day after reading a roadmap of guidance to governors
to gradually ease coronavirus orders, here was Donald Trump using Twitter in
mid-day to yell LIBERATE Michigan, Minnesota and Virginia.
My instant reactions only confirmed after thinking about them:
Even Trump does not believe Trump. Trump certainly does not
believe the doctors.
He thinks more coronavirus deaths are perfectly acceptable as a
trade-off for people to return to work, but also to return to golf courses and
such, which were the source of protest this week by Trump loyalists.
The tweeter-in-chief attacked three Democratic governors whose
states do not qualify for even the first of his open-ended categories for
reopening.
He is dangerous to the country and to my family.
And, apparently, Trump has nothing to do in the middle of the
day.
Trump just said some states are “too tough,” adding, “I think
elements of what they’ve done is too much and it’s just too much,” without
delineating what orders have gone too far.
That’s some leadership, for sure.
Relying on Drug Companies With Flawed Safety Records to Save Us from Covid-19
Can
we trust these guys to get it right?
By Ann Telnaes, Washington Post |
At the beginning of the year, the main news about Big Pharma was the possibility of a multi-billion-dollar opioid settlement with the states.
Now,
rather than being held accountable for tens of thousands of overdose deaths,
the industry is being hailed as our savior from Covid-19.
The news is filled with laudatory stories about the efforts of the drug companies to come up with a treatment for those currently suffering from the virus and a vaccine that may be the only way for society to return to something approximating normal.
The news is filled with laudatory stories about the efforts of the drug companies to come up with a treatment for those currently suffering from the virus and a vaccine that may be the only way for society to return to something approximating normal.
Of course, everyone wants these efforts to succeed, but we shouldn’t ignore the very checkered track record of the industry. The safety portion of that record suggests that pushing for extremely rapid results may be risky.
The
pharmaceutical industry’s safety problems date back at least to the 1930s, when
a company called S.E. Massengill introduced a liquid antibiotic without testing
and the drug turned out to cause fatal kidney damage.
In
the 1950s Parke-Davis heavily promoted a typhoid drug for less serious ailments
until it emerged that users were developing severe and irreversible anemia.
During the same period, thousands of children around the world were born with
birth defects after their mothers took the morning-sickness drug thalidomide
during pregnancy.
Sometimes
these scandals involved vaccines. In the mid-1950s a California company called
Cutter Laboratories produced large stocks of the new polio vaccine that
mistakenly contained the live virus. Scores of children who received the
vaccine developed polio.
Defenders
of the pharmaceutical industry will claim that safety practices are much more
stringent these days. But consider the recent
history of Johnson & Johnson, which is one of the companies
actively pursuing a coronavirus vaccine.
Why farmers are dumping milk down the drain and letting produce rot in fields
Pandemic uncovers supply chain flaws
Elizabeth Ransom, Pennsylvania State University; E. Melanie DuPuis, Pace University , and Michelle R. Worosz, Auburn University
Many Americans may be surprised and confused to see farmers dumping milk down the drain or letting vegetables rot in their fields.
Why would they be destroying food at a time when grocery stores and food pantries struggle to keep pace with surging demand during the coronavirus pandemic?
As sociologists with a specialty in agriculture and food, we study how the structure of the food system affects people’s lives and the environment.
Seeing food destroyed at a time when people are going hungry highlights both short- and long-term problems with this system.
Elizabeth Ransom, Pennsylvania State University; E. Melanie DuPuis, Pace University , and Michelle R. Worosz, Auburn University
A Pennsylvania dairy farmer watches 5,500 gallons of milk swirl down the drain. MediaNews Group/Reading Eagle via Getty Images |
Why would they be destroying food at a time when grocery stores and food pantries struggle to keep pace with surging demand during the coronavirus pandemic?
As sociologists with a specialty in agriculture and food, we study how the structure of the food system affects people’s lives and the environment.
Seeing food destroyed at a time when people are going hungry highlights both short- and long-term problems with this system.
Meet the new guy picked to lead the federal pandemic response
The
Best People, Also Labradoodles
There’s the mad king
who just fired a
leading doctor for arguing against
the king's fave quack theories to the sycophantic anti-science zealot who
dutifully insists the
coronavirus is almost behind us.
Now there’s the racist
wacko newly
appointed HHS spokesman to one Brian Harrison, a former Texas
dog breeder with no public health experience,
It turns out Harrison was
tapped by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar to run the federal
pandemic task force, which maybe helps explain the disastrous, multi-faceted,
weeks-long delays and
blunders that experts say could have prevented 90% of this
country's early COVID-19 deaths.
Photo from Dallas Labradoodles website |
Azar himself belongs
right up there on the list of murderous dolts not yet held accountable.
As head of the massive
HHS and its $1.3-trillion-budget, Azar, a Republican lawyer and former Big
Pharma lobbyist who clerked for the right-wing Antonin Scalia and hangs out
with blackout drunk Brett Kavanaugh, is tasked with overseeing almost every
federal public health agency, including the key Center for Disease Control and
Food and Drug Administration.
But Azar botched it
from the start:
Tuesday, April 28, 2020
Stupid on science
Trump’s
attacks on science and reason beggar belief
By
Will Collette
Donald
Trump’s recent advice that doctors should inject bleach or Lysol® into the
lungs of COVID-19 patients was the last straw for many.
He also suggested that doctors zap patients’ lungs with high levels of UV light or even a very strong light.
The New York City Poison Control Center reported 30 cases of people ingesting Lysol® or bleach just hours after Trump’s remarks.
He also suggested that doctors zap patients’ lungs with high levels of UV light or even a very strong light.
The New York City Poison Control Center reported 30 cases of people ingesting Lysol® or bleach just hours after Trump’s remarks.
Trump
has also pushed hydroxychloroquine as a miracle cure even though studies are
showing it not only doesn’t help, but actually can cause fatal heart problems.
At least two people have died from reactions after following Trump’s Rx.
At least two people have died from reactions after following Trump’s Rx.
But
it’s no surprise, coming from a deranged guy who has made a lifetime of false
claims, many of them dangerous, on scientific and medical subjects. The Union
of Concerned Scientists Center for Science and Democracy listed 130 Trump attacks on science and that was just as of 2017!
During
the current coronavirus pandemic, Trump has added many more.
The
Associated Press
recently assembled Trump’s greatest hits of scientific quackery that includes:
MUSIC VIDEO: Just a spoonful of Clorox
To watch this great video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPDPzbLFeP4
VIDEO: The Buck Stops Here
To watch this video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ozzwMBvvUiA&feature=emb_title
New leader for coastal agency
By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI
News staff
Jeffrey Willis (ecoRI photo) |
Fugate, who in 1986 became the agency’s first director, has no immediate plans other than to spend more time with family.
During an April 14 video
meeting, CRMC’s governing board approved deputy director Jeffrey Willis to
serve as acting director until Fugate’s replacement is hired.
Willis will take on the
duties of executive director while continuing his current responsibilities. He
said he intends to apply for the director position.
Several members of the
CRMC board spoke enthusiastically about Willis serving as interim director.
CRMC chairwoman Jennifer
Cervenka said Willis “is well liked and trusted by this council.”
MIT Researchers identify cells likely targeted by COVID-19 virus
Study finds specific
cells in the lungs, nasal passages, and intestines that are more susceptible to
infection
Massachusetts
Institute of Technology
Researchers at MIT;
the Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT, and Harvard; and the Broad Institute of MIT
and Harvard; along with colleagues from around the world have identified
specific types of cells that appear to be targets of the coronavirus that is
causing the Covid-19 pandemic.
Using existing data on
the RNA found in different types of cells, the researchers were able to search
for cells that express the two proteins that help the SARS-CoV-2 virus enter
human cells. They found subsets of cells in the lung, the nasal passages, and
the intestine that express RNA for both of these proteins much more than other
cells.
The researchers hope
that their findings will help guide scientists who are working on developing
new drug treatments or testing existing drugs that could be repurposed for
treating Covid-19.
"Our goal is to get information out to the community and to share data as soon as is humanly possible, so that we can help accelerate ongoing efforts in the scientific and medical communities," says Alex K. Shalek, the Pfizer-Laubach Career Development Associate Professor of Chemistry, a core member of MIT's Institute for Medical Engineering and Science (IMES), an extramural member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research, an associate member of the Ragon Institute, and an institute member at the Broad Institute.
Shalek and Jose
Ordovas-Montanes, a former MIT postdoc who now runs his own lab at Boston
Children's Hospital, are the senior authors of the study, which appears in Cell. The paper's lead authors are MIT graduate students Carly
Ziegler, Samuel Allon, and Sarah Nyquist; and Ian Mbano, a researcher at the
Africa Health Research Institute in Durban, South Africa.
Langevin supports House Passage of $484 Billion Interim Coronavirus Relief Package
Far from perfect but a step forward
By Ann Telnaes, Washington Post |
Earlier
in the day, Langevin spoke on the House floor in support
of the legislation. The relief package passed the House by a vote of 388-5 and
now heads to the President’s desk for his signature.
“Millions
of families, small business owners, and healthcare workers are in dire need of
help as our nation grapples with the COVID-19 pandemic. Congress is answering
their calls with an additional relief package that seeks to ensure public
health and bolster the nation’s economy with targeted support for mom-and-pop
shops, restaurants, and hospitals and medical personnel on the front lines.
The Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act also makes a massive investment in testing, which will be critical as communities contemplate how to begin the process of reopening.
The Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act also makes a massive investment in testing, which will be critical as communities contemplate how to begin the process of reopening.
Monday, April 27, 2020
In gratitude and celebration
"R.I. Angel of Hope and Strength" by famed RISD artist Shepard Fairey #RIArts |
Why Nursing Homes Are Being Overrun By The Trump Pandemic
You guessed it: gutted Obama-era regulations and an industry crony who has Trump’s ear
By Sarah Okeson
Former Kansas Gov. Mark Parkinson, a Democrat but the CEO of a nursing home industry group, wrote Trump after the 2016 election seeking a “collaborative approach” to regulation, much like the one the Federal Aviation Administration has had with the aircraft industry.
Team Trump acquiesced, rolling back
fines and proposing to weaken rules for
infection prevention employees. That collaborative approach has failed, much as
it did with the FAA , the agency that enabled failures in
the design of the Boeing 737 Max.
Shoddy federal oversight of planes helped kill 346 people. The
death toll from the pandemic, where health officials Seema Verma and Alex Azar helped
turn our nation’s nursing homes into Trump death traps, is more than 46,000.
“Nursing homes are incubators of
epidemics,” said Betsy McCaughey, the
chair of the Committee to Reduce
Infection Deaths.
Chronic conditions worsen coronavirus risk
Here's how to manage them amid the pandemic
Laurie Archbald-Pannone, University of Virginia
Amid the stress and confusion of coronavirus shutdowns and social distancing orders, it can seem to older patients as though everything is on pause.
Clinics have postponed regular office visits. Patients worry about going to pharmacies and grocery stores.
There’s even anecdotal evidence that people with serious issues such as chest pain are avoiding emergency rooms.
One important fact must not get overlooked amid this pandemic: Chronic health conditions still need attention.
If you had diabetes before the pandemic, you still have diabetes and should be monitoring your blood sugar levels. If you were advised to follow a low-salt diet before the pandemic to control your blood pressure, you still need to follow a low-salt diet during what my spouse calls “the duration.”
If you had to check in with your doctor if your weight increased from underlying congestive heart failure, you still need to check your weight daily and call your doctor.
As I remind my geriatric patients, taking care of chronic conditions is even more critical right now as the new coronavirus raises the risk for people with underlying medical problems.
Lungs, heart and even kidneys
If you have chronic medical conditions and you become infected with the coronavirus, you’ll likely face an increased risk of developing severe symptoms.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at a sample of U.S. patients with COVID-19 and found that 89% of those hospitalized in March had underlying conditions. The percentage rose to 94% for patients age 65 and older.
Laurie Archbald-Pannone, University of Virginia
Amid the stress and confusion of coronavirus shutdowns and social distancing orders, it can seem to older patients as though everything is on pause.
Clinics have postponed regular office visits. Patients worry about going to pharmacies and grocery stores.
There’s even anecdotal evidence that people with serious issues such as chest pain are avoiding emergency rooms.
One important fact must not get overlooked amid this pandemic: Chronic health conditions still need attention.
If you had diabetes before the pandemic, you still have diabetes and should be monitoring your blood sugar levels. If you were advised to follow a low-salt diet before the pandemic to control your blood pressure, you still need to follow a low-salt diet during what my spouse calls “the duration.”
If you had to check in with your doctor if your weight increased from underlying congestive heart failure, you still need to check your weight daily and call your doctor.
As I remind my geriatric patients, taking care of chronic conditions is even more critical right now as the new coronavirus raises the risk for people with underlying medical problems.
Lungs, heart and even kidneys
If you have chronic medical conditions and you become infected with the coronavirus, you’ll likely face an increased risk of developing severe symptoms.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at a sample of U.S. patients with COVID-19 and found that 89% of those hospitalized in March had underlying conditions. The percentage rose to 94% for patients age 65 and older.
Handful of Trump supporters demand Rhode Island drop pandemic counter-measures
Reopen RI Rally draws heroes to the State House
Healthcare workers silently counter-protest |
Saturday, a small
gathering of people stood on the steps of the Rhode
Island State House to deliver an important message.
There were seven health care workers silently counter-protesting the Reopen RI Rally, which called on Governor Gina Raimondo to open Rhode Island’s economy, despite the very real risks of people becoming infected by and dying of COVID-19 at increased rates.
There were seven health care workers silently counter-protesting the Reopen RI Rally, which called on Governor Gina Raimondo to open Rhode Island’s economy, despite the very real risks of people becoming infected by and dying of COVID-19 at increased rates.
The very presence of
these frontline health care workers bore witness to the reality of COVID-19, and the dangers the
disease brings to our most vulnerable communities.
The Reopen RI Rally
itself drew about 125 people at it’s height.
The rally at its height. |
Though organizers
insisted that the event was not a rally celebrating Donald Trump, Trump was very
present in the form of flags, hats, signs, slogans and shirts.
The official signs for
the rally, which said “Knock It Off Gina! Reopen Rhode Island” were designed to
be similar to the Trump 2020 signs that people carried.
Not a Trump rally. |
EDITOR'S NOTE: Republican House Minority Leader Blake "Flip" Filippi (who may or may not live in Charlestown or Block Island or Providence or Warwick) had this to say about this event: "There's a lot of questions out there we
don't have answers to. And maybe if the
people out on the street had answers, they wouldn't be protesting. And those
answers are the duty of the legislative branch to provide." OK, legislative leader Flip - what's YOUR answer? Inject bleach? - Will Collette
Sunday, April 26, 2020
Trump’s Derangement Threatens The Entire World
As his mental state worsens, he will take millions of us down with him
By Bandy X. Lee
By Bandy X. Lee
As the most eminent mental health experts warned
would happen since Donald Trump’s election,
the office of the U.S. presidency has become a locus of grave psychological
dysfunction. Seldom do we see our warnings realized in real life with
such recurrent, precise confirmation, as if on schedule.
The president’s latest suggestion that injecting bodies with disinfectant, or irradiating them with ultraviolet light, could help with COVID-19 is only the latest, blatant example of his malady: His boundless willingness to place the nation in harm’s way for his slightest gain.
Given our track record, the world should know that we were not speaking frivolously of his dangerousness and that, were Trump to continue in the presidency, not only the United States but the world would see vast, unnecessary increases in suffering and death.
Just as COVID-19 was exceeding 2
million confirmed cases across the world, Trump announced that he would freeze funding
for the World Health Organization (WHO), the main agency that is in charge of
helping the world to confront the pandemic. I have been consulting with the WHO
since its launch of the landmark World Report on Violence and Health.
On a shoestring budget, it does innovative and vital work around the world that saves lives in ways that no other agency can replace. For a global pandemic, which requires a concerted effort among nations, this funding means protecting ourselves in a closely linked world of international travel and interconnected economies.
On a shoestring budget, it does innovative and vital work around the world that saves lives in ways that no other agency can replace. For a global pandemic, which requires a concerted effort among nations, this funding means protecting ourselves in a closely linked world of international travel and interconnected economies.
The
remaining nine months of Trump’s presidency are looking to be the most
dangerous of all, for the United States and for the world.
This is especially true in the absence of U.S. leadership.
We will never know to what degree the COVID-19 pandemic could have been attenuated or contained altogether, like other near-pandemics in the past, had Trump not disbanded the nation’s global pandemic response system two years earlier, out of pathological envy of his predecessor, President Barack Obama.
It was a system that experts lauded throughout the world and voiced outcry for when it was dissolved.
We will never know to what degree the COVID-19 pandemic could have been attenuated or contained altogether, like other near-pandemics in the past, had Trump not disbanded the nation’s global pandemic response system two years earlier, out of pathological envy of his predecessor, President Barack Obama.
It was a system that experts lauded throughout the world and voiced outcry for when it was dissolved.
New poll gives Raimondo high numbers for COVID-19 response
Hassenfeld Institute poll finds most Rhode Islanders
approve of Raimondo’s pandemic response
The Hassenfeld Institute for Public Leadership today released a public opinion survey on the attitudes of Rhode Island registered voters relating to the coronavirus crisis. The survey was conducted from April 15 through April 18, 2020.
[The poll relied heavily on
landlines, older people and those who make more than $75,000 a year.]
The poll surveyed public
attitude about the job approval voters give elected officials in handling the
coronavirus crisis, trust voters place in information being provided, the
effect of the crisis on personal economic well-being, the impact on participation
in the political process, and attitudes towards the roles and responsibilities
of government.
The Institute’s
Director, Gary Sasse, said “The Spring of
2020 marks the 10th anniversary of the
Institute. Unfortunately, it coincided with the global pandemic. In light of
these circumstances, as a public service the Institute has decided that this
was the right time to examine the public’s perception of leadership during this
crisis.”
On keeping Rhode Island agriculture alive
Senator
Sosnowski lauds DEM for work in keeping fisheries, farmers, garden centers in
business
Sen.
V. Susan Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown, New Shoreham) is thanking the
Department of Environmental Management for working with her to ensure that
fisheries, farmers and garden centers remain in business with necessary
precautions to protect workers and consumers for the duration of the COVID-19
pandemic.
“I
want those who work in fishing and agriculture to know that we’ve developed
policy and protocols to enable businesses to remain open during this crisis,”
said Senator Sosnowski, who chairs the Senate Committee on Environment and
Agriculture.
“Those
in agriculture and the seafood industry are struggling since the closure of
restaurants and other businesses and supply chains. We want them to know that
we’ve been working hard to take steps to keep business going.”
Senator
Sosnowski has been in frequent contact with Department of Environmental
Management Director Janet Coit and the Director of the Division of Agriculture
Ken Ayars, as well as with the Rhode Island representative from the United
States Department of Agriculture, the Rhode Island Farm Bureau and other
stakeholders on all issues that agriculture and seafood industries are facing
at this time.
URI Dining Services feeds 500 Rhode Island senior citizens, needy individuals a day
Refrigerated
truck leaves Kingston Campus each weekday morning for senior centers around
state
As
University of Rhode Island Dining Services workers loaded 500 individually
wrapped meals into a refrigerated truck last Wednesday morning, others were
already hard at work preparing Thursday’s meal–shepherd’s pie with spinach,
carrots and rolls.
Wednesday’s
meal of fried chicken, beans and macaroni and cheese, went to Cumberland’s
Senior Center, and Thursday morning, dining services workers were off to East
Providence with the shepherd’s pie meal.
Each individual meal was fully cooked and prepared and only needed to be reheated.
Each individual meal was fully cooked and prepared and only needed to be reheated.
It’s
all part of an effort involving the University, Rhode Island’s Office of
Healthy Aging and the state’s senior centers.
Older Rhode Islanders staying home need help with nutrition; senior centers, which are no longer providing communal meals to their patrons at their centers, needed a way to get meals to them; and URI Dining Services has plenty of food to prepare the meals, since most of its nearly 6,000 resident students did not return to campus after spring break when the University ceased in-person instruction and most in-person services.
Older Rhode Islanders staying home need help with nutrition; senior centers, which are no longer providing communal meals to their patrons at their centers, needed a way to get meals to them; and URI Dining Services has plenty of food to prepare the meals, since most of its nearly 6,000 resident students did not return to campus after spring break when the University ceased in-person instruction and most in-person services.
Trump’s Self-Serving Immigration Ban
He Closes the Country to
Immigrants, Except the Ones He Regularly Hires and Fires
By
David Cay Johnston, DCReport Editor-in-Chief
Featured imaged:” Trump and his Mar-a-Lago staff, photographed for Vanity Fair magazine (Getty Images). The image is used on the Mar-a-Lago Staff parody Twitter feed. |
Donald Trump’s new ban on new immigration is designed to make sure he can continue to hire foreign workers at Mar-a-Lago and his other properties, denying jobs to the Americans he claims to care about.
During the five
o’clock follies Tuesday, Trump said “by pausing immigration we will help put
unemployed Americans first in line for jobs as America reopens—so important.
It would be wrong and unjust for Americans laid off by the virus to be replaced by any new immigrant labor flown in from abroad. We must first take care of the American worker—take care of the American worker.”
It would be wrong and unjust for Americans laid off by the virus to be replaced by any new immigrant labor flown in from abroad. We must first take care of the American worker—take care of the American worker.”
But less than a minute
later, Trump added a self-serving caveat:
The ban applies “only
to people seeking permanent residency,” he said, citing holders and seekers of
green cards. He said the ban on immigrant workers does “not apply to those
entering on a temporary basis.”
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Death homes
Corporate-owned nursing homes and Covid-19
It
was only a few days ago that the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced that nursing homes will be
required to notify residents and their families when coronavirus cases have been
discovered in a facility.
This comes many weeks after the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington became an early Covid-19 hotspot and deaths started mounting at other nursing homes across the country.
This comes many weeks after the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington became an early Covid-19 hotspot and deaths started mounting at other nursing homes across the country.
Even
before the pandemic began, conditions in the nation’s roughly 15,000 nursing
homes, which house some 1.5 million residents, were far from ideal.
As a Washington Post investigation recently found, about 40 percent of nursing homes with publicly reported cases of coronavirus — the list of which is far from complete, given varying transparency practices among the states — had been previously cited by government inspectors for violating regulations meant to control the spread of infections. This made them all the more susceptible to coronavirus.
As a Washington Post investigation recently found, about 40 percent of nursing homes with publicly reported cases of coronavirus — the list of which is far from complete, given varying transparency practices among the states — had been previously cited by government inspectors for violating regulations meant to control the spread of infections. This made them all the more susceptible to coronavirus.
The
blame for that poor track record rests to a significant degree with the large
corporations, including private equity firms, that control a substantial
portion of the country’s nursing homes.
While the Washington Post story did not identify the parent companies of the facilities with reported Covid-19 cases, the data in Violation Tracker shows the compliance problems at those corporations.
While the Washington Post story did not identify the parent companies of the facilities with reported Covid-19 cases, the data in Violation Tracker shows the compliance problems at those corporations.
ICE detainees in Central Falls private prison sound COVID-19 alarm
People Detained by ICE in the Wyatt Detention Center Raise Concerns About the Spread of COVID-19 in the Facility, Demand Release
Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance (AMOR)
On April 17, people detained by ICE at the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility released a letter detailing concerns about the spread of COVID-19 inside the facility and pleading for immediate release.
Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance (AMOR)
On April 17, people detained by ICE at the Donald W. Wyatt Detention Facility released a letter detailing concerns about the spread of COVID-19 inside the facility and pleading for immediate release.
The letter describes the detainees’ inability to practice social distancing due to the conditions inside the facility.
“Our suffering is immense. Our lives is in danger,” the letter reads, “There are people in a sensitive health condition in this facility.”
The letter comes almost two weeks after the detainees launched a hunger strike in protest of the unsanitary conditions inside the facility. The hunger strike ended after three days due to increasing retaliation against the hunger strikers, such as cutting off phone access and placing people in isolation.
“It is critical that people detained at Wyatt are released, considering the tragedy that happened in 2008 when Hiu Lui Ng passed away while detained at the Wyatt due to medical neglect,” says Arely Diaz of the Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance.
The letter comes almost two weeks after the detainees launched a hunger strike in protest of the unsanitary conditions inside the facility. The hunger strike ended after three days due to increasing retaliation against the hunger strikers, such as cutting off phone access and placing people in isolation.
“It is critical that people detained at Wyatt are released, considering the tragedy that happened in 2008 when Hiu Lui Ng passed away while detained at the Wyatt due to medical neglect,” says Arely Diaz of the Alliance to Mobilize Our Resistance.
“Ng’s life could have been saved if ICE had prioritized the health and safety of those in detention, and many lives can be saved now. It is impossible for people to practice proper sanitation and social distancing protocols while detained and it is only a matter of time before COVID-19 starts spreading throughout the facility..”
EDITOR'S NOTE: Prisons are among the worst places to be during a pandemic. The very first person among our circle of friends and family to contract COVID-19 is a worker at one of Connecticut's state prisons. Conditions inside are perversely ideal for the spread of a contagious disease spread through the air. Prisoners are in close quarters. Ventilation is poor. Sanitation is spotty. Among the prison population are many elderly people and persons with compromised immune systems. They are becoming the latest hot-spots. - Will Collette
EDITOR'S NOTE: Prisons are among the worst places to be during a pandemic. The very first person among our circle of friends and family to contract COVID-19 is a worker at one of Connecticut's state prisons. Conditions inside are perversely ideal for the spread of a contagious disease spread through the air. Prisoners are in close quarters. Ventilation is poor. Sanitation is spotty. Among the prison population are many elderly people and persons with compromised immune systems. They are becoming the latest hot-spots. - Will Collette
Charlestown to receive $168K for new Ninigret Park "fitness space"
DEM announces $6 million in grants for local recreation projects
Getty Images |
The
grants will fund 27 projects across the state including new athletic fields,
playgrounds, splash parks, bike paths, walking trails, shoreline access,
basketball, tennis, and pickleball courts, and various site improvements.
Since
the inception of Earth Day in 1970, efforts to improve air and water quality,
clean up contaminated lands, conserve open space, and increase recreational
opportunities have greatly enhanced Rhode Islanders' quality of life.
Over the past five decades, almost 50,000 acres of land have been protected and nearly $75 million in grants has been invested for over 500 recreation projects across the state.
Although the state and some local communities have temporarily closed parks, playgrounds, and sports fields to limit exposure to COVID-19, these closures have created a void where people used to safely recreate. The grants awarded today will help communities unlock recreation opportunities for all Rhode Islanders when it is safe to do so.
Over the past five decades, almost 50,000 acres of land have been protected and nearly $75 million in grants has been invested for over 500 recreation projects across the state.
Although the state and some local communities have temporarily closed parks, playgrounds, and sports fields to limit exposure to COVID-19, these closures have created a void where people used to safely recreate. The grants awarded today will help communities unlock recreation opportunities for all Rhode Islanders when it is safe to do so.
Peak Tick time is coming
Environmental Management and Health Depts. urge tick prevention
As the weather is getting warmer, state public health and environmental officials are urging residents to continue practicing social distancing when outdoors and to take additional precautions to avoid direct contact with ticks that can transmit Lyme disease.
Rhode
Island has the fifth-highest rate of Lyme disease in the country.
With a very mild winter in which many more ticks than usual have likely survived until spring and with many more people expected to be outside this year, the Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) and the Department of Environmental Management (DEM) are concerned that 2020 may be shaping up to be a bad year for tick bites and the transmission of Lyme disease and other diseases.
With a very mild winter in which many more ticks than usual have likely survived until spring and with many more people expected to be outside this year, the Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH) and the Department of Environmental Management (DEM) are concerned that 2020 may be shaping up to be a bad year for tick bites and the transmission of Lyme disease and other diseases.
As
Rhode Islanders enjoy Rhode Island's outdoors safely with social distancing, it
is also important to be aware of ticks and the diseases they carry.
According to 2018 RIDOH disease data, Rhode Island had 1,111 cases of Lyme disease, with an incidence rate of 105 cases per 100,000 people, giving it the nation's fifth-highest rate of the disease. Reported cases of Lyme disease in Rhode Island increased by approximately 20% in 2017 and remained at a similar level in 2018.
According to 2018 RIDOH disease data, Rhode Island had 1,111 cases of Lyme disease, with an incidence rate of 105 cases per 100,000 people, giving it the nation's fifth-highest rate of the disease. Reported cases of Lyme disease in Rhode Island increased by approximately 20% in 2017 and remained at a similar level in 2018.
The GOP Has Become a Death Cult
American conservatism—the so-called "culture of
life"—worships annihilation.
By Mike Lofgren for Common Dreams
A decade ago, in my first public writing since leaving Capitol
Hill, I warned that the Republican Party, in its
evolution towards an extremist conservative movement allied with extremist
Christian fundamentalism, was becoming like “one of the intensely ideological
authoritarian parties of 20th century Europe.”
After Donald Trump’s enthronement as the decider of our fate, I analyzed the GOP’s descent into a nihilism that belied every one of its supposed “values.” They value only absolute power or ruin.
After Donald Trump’s enthronement as the decider of our fate, I analyzed the GOP’s descent into a nihilism that belied every one of its supposed “values.” They value only absolute power or ruin.
It is now long past time to cast off highfalutin’ Latinisms and
simply call the Republicans and their religious and secular conservative allies
what they are, and in unadorned English: a death cult. As the country reels
from the coronavirus pandemic, our national government might just as well be
run by the infamous People’s Temple of Jonestown.
By now we are benumbed by the all-pervasive arguments over
relaxing workplace shutdowns and stay-at-home orders due to coronavirus. In any
sane society, the issue would be how to institute the most efficient measures
to defeat the pandemic in the shortest time and with the lowest loss of life.
Instead, Trump and his merry band of lunatics have hijacked the national debate into a faux-serious discussion of when, oh, please, how soon, can we “reopen the economy?” Naturally, the media gamely continue to play along with this calculated bit of dezinformatsiya.
Instead, Trump and his merry band of lunatics have hijacked the national debate into a faux-serious discussion of when, oh, please, how soon, can we “reopen the economy?” Naturally, the media gamely continue to play along with this calculated bit of dezinformatsiya.
This has led to extreme callousness, like that shown by Texas
lieutenant governor Dan Patrick, who opined that grams and gramps should be
eager to shuffle off this mortal coil for the sake of their grandchildren.
There is abundant empirical evidence against this notion: voters
in Florida, known as “God’s waiting room” for its geriatric population, are
notoriously averse to paying one cent in state income tax to fund education or
child health, let alone lay down their lives.
In any case, the 69-year-old Patrick, who claims he’s willing to die for his proposition, did not relinquish the burdens of his office to volunteer as an emergency room orderly.
In any case, the 69-year-old Patrick, who claims he’s willing to die for his proposition, did not relinquish the burdens of his office to volunteer as an emergency room orderly.
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